, The Associated Press 2004-01-29
By all accounts, George Nussbaum demands a lot from his Internet connection. He streams video and transfers large files from his office. His family downloads movie trailers and his stepson listens to and buys music online.
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Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-29
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
Phil Karn (1 replies)
Phil Karn (1 replies)
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
try controlling your customers connections to outside email servers for spam purpose
2004-01-30
an IRT staffer
an IRT staffer
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
Anonymous (4 replies)
Anonymous (4 replies)
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Not only cable companies, dsl too.
2004-01-30
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
Think about the numbers
2004-01-30
Anonymous (3 replies)
Anonymous (3 replies)
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
Comcast targets Internet `abusers' but won't reveal limits
2004-01-30
peter (at) kickit (dot) to [email concealed]
peter (at) kickit (dot) to [email concealed]

Serving from a Comcast cable connection is illegal. It violates the service agreement. You cannot legally run a web server, a mail server, even KaZaa. Of course, since you don't have a static IP number, a web server isn't very useful anyway.
Cable companies are in "broadcast" mode. You are supposed to consume content, not produce it. Now it seems you're not allowed to consume too much, either.
DSL is MUCH slower, but at least one doesn't have to passively "watch" the internet. One can contribute.
BTW: I'm hosting four web sites (lots of photos) and two blogs w/about 10,000 hits (not unique visits) per month from home and I don't come anywhere near my 3GB/month limit (there's some additional charge afterward, not a disconnection).
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